Poltergeist (1982) | |
The Story (continued)
Robbie plants a fanciful solution in Steve's mind when he suggests a creative method to retrieve his sister from the spirit world: "If I got killed, could I visit her and show her how to get back here? You could tie a rope around me and hold it tight. Then somebody could come and get us and we could live somewhere else." Dr. Lesh explains the reasons why ghosts or spirits of departed humans can become malevolent:
While everyone is sleeping in the downstairs living room, Marty searches in the refrigerator for something to eat. A raw piece of beef steak that he removes and sets down slowly inches its way across the kitchen counter. The chicken drumstick he has been chewing drops from his mouth to the floor - it is swarming with maggots. As he washes his mouth out in the bathroom, he has a morbid, hallucinatory experience. He watches his face deteriorate in the haunted mirror - in horror, he claws at his face and peels back the rotting flesh with his fingers, pulling off gobs of skin down to the bone [reminiscent of the Nazis' fate in Spielberg's Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981). The hands in the scene actually belonged to co-producer Spielberg]. After a sudden flash of light, his face is restored back to normal. Sensors record vibrations and other movements. The remote video-camera directs its lens toward the upstairs room, where smoke and bright lights materialize. A spooky apparition with swirling, wispy tendrils descends the staircase, surrounded by lights and wind. The ghost whisks itself up and through the ceiling. A playback of the recording reveals numerous, blindingly-bright spirits parading down the stairway:
Ultimately, Dr. Lesh has the first-hand evidence she sought - the jewelry and videotapes: "I'm gonna have to display these, you know." Both Freelings reject publicity from popular TV shows:
Dr. Lesh departs with Marty, but proposes further help. Mr. Teague (James Karen), Steve's boss, inquires about his absence during a visit in the plagued house. The piano moves, and the front-door light malfunctions - so Steve ushers him outside. The two of them take a drive to a view point above the developments, where new housing tracts are being planned:
The proposed location for Steve's new home rests next to a vast cemetery: "Not much room for a pool, is there?" he surmises. Teague reassures him: "We own all the land. We've already made arrangements for relocating the cemetery." Steve is flabbergasted that a sacred graveyard would be disturbed for further development by the greedy real estate company. An explanation for Carol Anne's abduction arises - developers built their own house over a bulldozed, sacred Indian burial ground:
Dr. Lesh recommends a professional exorcist and "extraordinary clairvoyant" named Tangina (Zelda Rubinstein), a midget-sized, plump woman: "She's cleaned many houses. Her gifts have been documented..." The psychic's first pronouncement reveals her extra-sensory powers: "This house has many hearts." She confidently and calmly comforts Diane: "Your daughter is alive and in this house." Tangina asks about "the last incident of bi-location," and bolsters the strength of Diane - the mother-figure:
In a spellbinding monologue, the eccentric Tangina speaks of Carol Anne's relation to the unseen spirits that have pulled her into their sphere:
Three ribbons, handkerchiefs, numbered tennis balls, thick rope, and bath water are prepared. Carol Anne is summoned by her mother's voice and then by her father's authoritative, angry demeanor. Against her own instincts, Diane commands her daughter to "run to the light, Carol Anne. Run as fast as you can...Mommy is in the light...Mommy is waiting for you in the light." The door to the bedroom is opened - blinding blue strobe-lights flash from within the closet. Tangina instructs Ryan to "go downstairs and wait by the target" and Steven to "give me the tennis ball marked number one." She discovers a passageway between the closet through the living room ceiling when she tosses the ball into the closet and it returns by way of the living room. Steve tosses a handful of rope into the closet - the end of it, covered with pinkish slime, falls at Ryan's feet from the living room ceiling. Although Tangina volunteers to go in, the rope is tied around Diane's waist. With Steve lowering her into the upstairs closet, and Ryan pulling the other end of the rope in the living room, Diane is guided through the closet into the channel of the twilight other-world. A spell is cast by the clairvoyant: "Cross over, children. All are welcome. All welcome, go into the light...There is peace and serenity in the light." In one of the truly scary moments in the film, Steve panics and pulls on the rope - the hideous, giant head of the Beast roars at him from the closet door - he drops the rope holding Diane and the enraged creature retreats. Clutching Carol Anne in her arms and grasping the rope, Diane plummets from the ceiling to the living room floor - both are covered with a reddish, slimy, jelly-like afterbirth. She has successfully plucked her daughter from the jaws of death. The bath water revives them. Tangina prematurely and smugly boasts to the video camera recording the events about the extraction:
A moving van is being packed with boxes of the Freelings' belongings - they are moving away permanently. Another inanimate object almost 'kills' Steve - he stumbles over Robbie's bicycle in the front yard. Diane has white curls of hair at her temples from the harrowing ordeal. They are "leaving tonight for sure." Diane is taking a soothing bath and the younger children rest in the serene, silent and peaceful house. The paranormal events commence again: the frightening, grinning clown doll vanishes from its customary chair, grabs Robbie, pulls him under the bed and attempts to strangle its owner. Another invisible spirit traumatizes Diane - the malignant force bounces her on the bed, hurls her against the bedroom wall, and drags her across the ceiling [a macabre version of Fred Astaire's incredible dance on the ceiling and walls in Royal Wedding (1951)]. The closet comes to life with more virulence than before - there's oozing, gooey slime, white-hot light, and more sucking power. The Beast bars Diane from entering her children's bedroom door - she screams: "No, don't touch my baby." In a memorable terrifying conclusion - a finale of nightmarish horror, the distraught mother runs outside into the yard for help - in the rain - and makes a wrong step. She slips into the muddy, excavated pit next to the house, dug for their swimming pool. She slides down the slippery slope into the dirty water - she surfaces with skeletal faces of corpses (with silent, screaming expressions) rising behind her. Coffins, with partly decomposed, rotting corpses, implode from beneath the ground. Diane scrambles to escape, but the mud prevents her from getting a grip, and she slides back into the macabre swimming pool of death. Her neighbors pull her out, and she rushes back upstairs to her children's bedroom. In the corridor, the perspective of the passageway lengthens, and as she runs toward the bedroom door, the distance increases. With a desperate assault, she finally reaches the room, which is being sucked into the grotesque maw of the Beast. By grasping hands in a chain, she pulls her young children from the threatening jaws. More coffins explode through the floor of the house and in the yard, opening up and exposing more skeletal remains. Steve condemns his boss for lying to him about Phase One of the Cuesta Verde Estates development:
[The vengeful ghosts are upset because the house (and the entire subdivision) was built by crooked, greedy land developers over the site of an "ancient tribal burial ground" - a sacrilegious violation of their sacred space - the cemetery was moved with its headstones, but the bodies were left in the ground.] The Freelings recover Dana (who screams "What's happening?"), reclaim their family, and escape in the family car with the dog through a dangerous gauntlet of obstacles as more skeletal corpses burst from underneath. There is nothing left on the plot of ground that was the Freeling's house after it implodes. They drive by the ironic sign: "You are now leaving Cuesta Verde - We'll miss you!" Another hotel marquee at their Holiday Inn announces: "WELCOME DR. FANTASY & FRIENDS." Tired, the evicted family finds refuge in a room there. Steve shuts the door - after a moment, he opens it and shoves the room's TV out onto the balcony for the night. After the credits have played and blackness fills the screen, giggling children's voices fill the soundtrack, and then slowly diminish. |